dimension. We can hardly prove this. The dimensions which an object apparently
has for us is again a matter of experience, for this cannot only be derived from
the dimensions of the retinal image.
This is soon to be perceived when various people are asked how large they
see the moon. The dimensions which they give differ fantastically.
From experience we compare what we see as regards colour and size with
what we know and then from this results our personal *observation".
Besides these totally personal observations as to the form and the classifi-
cation of the image, certain rules are to be recognised.
We mean this: everyone who fixes his eye upon a ball does not see a square
object. When a figure has been drawn on the ball we all see this in the same
place on the whole if we turn the eye towards the same place of observing.
This fact is very important. Of course little differences in observing
the shape are possible as a consequence of variation of our eye-lens; it is also
possible to have variations in the shape of the figure in the image, when we
make recognition difficult by vague colours and contours or if we observe
when it is more or less dark, but when the portrait of a cat is pictured on the
ball we do not see a dog, as long as the portrait has been duly pictured.
The relation between the object itself and the image which we get of that
object is so closely tied down with mathematical rules, that we often make the
mistake of thinking that the image we form of that object really is the
object, that is to say that we really optically observe the object itself. The
analogy is deceitful as well.
We can aim at every point of the object if we want to shoot at it and hit
the mark, supposing that we are good marksmen and have good rifles. We
observe the movements of the object as well.
This teaches us immediately that other persons, fully independent of us.
see the movements in the same way.
Yet, reality can already play us a trick now, because we switch on our
speed of reaction, which is entirely subjective.
It may happen that the one observes a movement in a somewhat different
sense than another, even we can see a fact occur differently, if circumstances
are too difficult for normal observation.
If however we take people of normal psychical condition, who are normally
sighted, and we have the observation taking place calmly and without involving
difficulties, then the image observed will be the same for several observers,
taking into consideration the restrictions mentioned before: variations in lens
and colour sensibility.
The fact that the relation between the object and the image which we make
of it is so accurately tied down by rules, is also the cause of the error made by
the uninitiated, as if we project outside ourselves our image according to the
rules of optics. Optics as such does not play a part at all in the creation of our
mental image.
Now it should be interesting to know whether that close connection between
our image and the object (as we stated when viewing with one eye only) also
holds good in the case of seeing binocularly.
This we shall discuss later when treating binocular vision. Besides being,
able to fix our eye (that is our eye-axis) upon an object, we can also (once more
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